Geert Wilders Arrives in Australia

CONTROVERSIAL Dutch MP Geert Wilders has delivered a message to Australia ahead of a series of speaking events across the nation: “I am not the devil.”

He is not? When the only information you get is through Australia’s state run media you would probably believe he is.

The anti-Islam campaigner has been allowed to enter the country after the federal government relented and agreed to give him a visa, claiming it did not want to make him a cause celebre by continuing to block his trip.

His inflammatory views Â (?) Â have created fiery debate in Europe for years and he is set to deliver the same message in Australia after being invited by the Melbourne-based anti-Islamisation Q Society.

The 49-year-old told News Limited he was not a “monster from Mars”, a bigot, an extremist, a racist, a far right-winger – nor anything else he has been labelled.

“I represent one million people in one of the most tolerant and oldest democracies in the world and I address real problems for real people which are ignored by the political elite, and say things about the nation of Islam; for me this is very normal that is what I am,” he said.

Anti-fascist demonstratorsÂ Feral fools & tools react to supporters of Dutch politician Geert Wilders in London, Friday, March 5, 2010. Anti-fascist demonstrators Â These ratbags scuffled with police as Wilders brought his film denouncing Islam and the Quran to Britain’s august House of Lords.

Mr Wilders said he is a one-man mission to warn Australia of the dangers of Islamic immigration and loss of national identity.

“I hope you can learn from the mistakes we made about immigration and the lack of guts to define Islam for what it is,” he said.

“I am not talking about the people (Muslims). I’ve met very friendly and hospitable people in Arab and Islamic countries. I am talking about the ideology of Islam.”

Wilders said he knew of the ANZACs story but warned the spirit that propelled our nation years ago was at risk of being lost.

“I believe Islam and freedom and incompatible and I think we should be awake to this terrible ideology that is coming to our countries and societies and getting stronger, stronger, stronger and we are not fighting it we are appeasing, appeasing, appeasing and we lost track of what we really are and what we should be and what our grandparents, also in Australia with the Anzacs, what they fought and died for to liberate Europe,” he said.

Wilders, who controls the balance of power in the Dutch parliament as leader of the fourth largest political party, is scheduled to speak in Sydney, Melbourne and Perth.

The Islamic Friendship Association has said the Muslim community have the right to peacefully protest the speaking events but recommended people simply ignore Mr Wilders visit so as not to draw further attention to his extremist messages.

Wilders says his views are not popular but he felt someone had to say something and he had nothing to lose.

In 2004, two assassins armed with grenades were caught after an hour-long siege in the Hague plotting to murder the platinum-blond Wilders.

He has a small army of bodyguards who watch him around the clock and has to live in various safehouses and even an army barracks and prison facility and at one stage could only see his family once a week.

He continues to receive death threats with a fatwa declared.

He had been banned from the UK but eventually was allowed in but then had to move his speaking tour due to protests.

He has also been prosecuted in civil and criminal courts in the Netherlands over his “race hate” views but he was acquitted with the courts declaring what he was saying was not illegal.

He was prosecuted but not convicted. That’s all.

He says he doesn’t think his presence in Australia would interrupt the federal election and no politician wanted to meet him anyway but he hoped the issue of Islam could be discussed.

“In the interest of the parties in Australia, if I may give them one advice, to address the problem not label anything talking about culture and Islam as extreme or far right or whatever they are saying,” he said.

“People must be represented, problems must be addressed and solutions must be found and by ignoring the problem or labeling people as crazy or devils if they talk about it or come and visit won’t help them anyway.”

3 thoughts on “Geert Wilders Arrives in Australia”

Quite a lot of people here are civilised, courteous and have an IQ higher than their shoesize. Unfortunately they are not always the loudest.

The others are as strident as they are stupid and, unfortunately some of them sit on our government benches. In fact, since there seems to be not even one politician, paying you the minimum courtesy of receiving you, the leader of one of the major political parties in one of the oldest European democrasies, our political ranks are full of cowards, bigots and idiots.

Australia is already sharia compliant as can be demonstrated by the treatment of Mr Wilders and the demonising of his supporters by “the ruling elites” (politicians, media, religious institutions, educational institutions) and our pussy abstinence at the un re “palestine” . Labor would have lost the muslim vote had we voted no. Australian multiculturalism is “better” than anywhere else we are told, pigs bum, we follow blindly the path of Europe & Britain but are just not as far down the toilet yet. Wake up Australians, at least listen to what Geert Wilders has to say, he is not advocating violence or hate but he is staunchly on the side of personal liberties and free speech. If you haven’t worked out by now that the social discourse has been hijacked by the looney left who are steeped in moral & cultural relativism and a deep loathing of all things western & civilized and the things about our culture that have made us great then you haven’t been paying attention. Geert Wilders is a hero.